Sunday, March 30, 2008

Lights out

There's nothing wrong with the urge to do good, but most often the urge is expressed with romantic, meaningless and even counter-productive gesture. Perhaps "Earth Hour" is one of them. Switching off the electricity for an hour would indeed have some kind of a psychological attraction to those who think technology has done us a mean trick by allowing us to have a more pleasant evening environment than possible whilst squatting around a fire, swatting mosquitoes and worrying about malaria, but I'm sure an hour after Earth Hour, the twin Sub-Zero refrigerators will be back on, along with the pool heater and the air conditioning and the climate control in the wine cellar every house in Beverly Hills is possessed of. I'm sure more kilowatt hours are involved in spreading the word than will be saved by switching to candles made from petroleum based, paraffin wax.

Sure, I could have switched off last night; lit some kerosene mantle lamps and indulged in some battery powered music, but to what purpose? Living in a hurricane zone and being an emergency communications specialist, I'm well equipped for temporary self sufficiency. A home lit by fire however, is far less efficient and far more polluting than one blessed by Edison's genius and the pollution and energy consumption involved with producing and disposing of batteries is far worse than what comes off the grid. It's all a bit like wearing ribbons and going on walks for AIDS or breast cancer. It gets people talking and socializing and feeling like philanthropists, but doesn't really involve them in doing anything constructive. Worst of all it allows those who really are vested in raping the planet to dismiss us as hippies, tree huggers, wearers of sandals and with other meaningless categories. Isn't it a bit like getting stoned and painting your face like a color blind Apache and thinking that's going to bring on a new age of peace and harmony?

Is it really that the benefit of having good light after the sun has gone down has made our atmosphere unstable or is it that there are far too many of us? Is it a grand gesture to do without an hour's light while so much of the world lives in abject poverty and filth and darkness, or is it hypocrisy? It's really only the relatively affluent who do these things for an hour before running the jacuzzi, turning on the 52" TV and cranking the AC down to 70 anyway. Isn't it a sad fact that if two thirds of the world had a third of our comforts, the planet's ecology might collapse?

And who knows what people will really do when the lights are out? We had a mini baby boom here after the storms of 2004-2005 and that gets to the root of the problem - there are so many of us that we may have to keep the larger part in poverty so that the smaller part doesn't have to go to sleep when the sun goes down, gets to eat strawberries in February, can travel at will and is never out of sight of a Starbucks. It isn't technology with it's hand around our throat, it's your kids, their kids and their kids' kids. It isn't technology that makes us give in to the urge to breed like rabbits and it isn't sanity that makes us interfere in other peoples efforts to keep the population under control. It's religion, it's greed and sometimes it's even fear of a socialism free future where society won't take care of us making us think we need to have 18 children.

If there's anything I have faith in though, it's that circumstances will continue to rule us rather than the other way around. It's partly because we aren't quite smart enough or rational enough, but it's partly because we indulge in fatuous displays rather than making hard decisions.

6 comments:

Baltazar said...

I saw a flood light two days ago that had 126 light emitting diode's lighting a sign in front of a building.

Capt. Fogg said...

Yes, they're still really expensive but the price will come down pretty soon, I think. LED light seems kind of spooky loking, but maybe it's just me.

Still, it's going to take more than low wattage home lighting to make any measurable dent in world power consumption considering how many new lights are going on in China and India and elsewhere.

Paul said...

A lot of people mis-interpret the law of evolution's survival of the fittest to mean that the "best" will prevail. But in reality it is survival of those most fit to re-produce.
Yes, there are too many people and that is the problem in a nutshell.
Too many people, and they're getting dumber and dumber.
I have 9 nieces and nephews, the 5 with college degree's have 0 children. 2 of the remaining 4 have 7 children total. Not coincidentally the 2 breeders grew up in a fundamentalist household.

Capt. Fogg said...

You're right about evolution and we certainly don't seem to be a society where intelligence produces more children. I have to confess to having a couple of them myself.

Societies evolve as well but this one seems to be moving away from rational thought.

Intellectual Insurgent said...

The problem on earth is not necessarily too many people as much as it is too much waste and pollution, rendering precious resources out of reach.

Capt. Fogg said...

There has to be a point where raising more people out of poverty will overwhelm our ability to deal with waste and pollution even as the technology improves. If we built cars that are twice as efficient, it won't matter as China and India put hundreds of millions of new ones on the road.